10+ Tips on Combating Creative Block

Thanks to readers for responding to my last blog post:

March Madness: Celebrating creativity and the (sometimes maddening) creative process

Tracy Graves, digital + social media consultant@ B4SouthWhen I'm stuck, the world easily descends into a maelstrom of despair. And then, to re-jigger myself, I spend oodles of time looking at other people's work. I try and take the pressure off and create something for myself instead of for a client. I read something utterly escapist and don't worry about whether I'm intellectually furthering myself. And most importantly, I accept the fact that I need to get at least 5 crappy versions of something out of the way, and then something will emerge worth keeping.Christopher Harting, photographer + philosopher@ Christopher Harting StudioGo to Manhattan. Walk around and look at stuff. Drink coffee. Walk around some more. But you know the truth? I never have that problem. Never, ever, ever.John DiCocco, creative director, writer + editor(and reporter for the Tiny Mind Gazette)I'm pretty fortunate in that I have rarely suffered this dreaded event, except when writing ad copy. And when that occurs, I have a standby tactic. I start asking outlandish questions:“What if the whole thing was blue?""What if your parents spoke two different languages and you didn't understand either one?""What if you knew everything that was going to happen one hour ahead of time?""What's the worst that could happen—I mean, really, the WORST?Okay, backtrack from there. "What if it/he/the nation were twice/half as big/small/loud/dense/bright etc?"Michael Calienes, creative director + copywriterTransplantSelf-induced water boarding.Cuban music in the background.Freedom.Kelley Rugg, producer, director, writer + videographerRowboat ProductionsCreativity is not about making or forcing but about allowing and trusting, and so what I do when I feel any type of block is understand that I am causing it by trying too hard… so then I let go, get out of the way, and absolutely keep going.Trebor Healey, poet + novelisttreborhealey.comI think it's best to shift your surroundings, take a trip, small or big, spend time in nature…go to museums, dance performances, concerts...other creative ventures will inspire your own, will put you in the creative reality. If all else fails, revisit your favorite writers' or artists' work like a bee dropping in on the hive of honey and you will once again know how to get to the flowers you seek.Doug Eymer, creative director + designer EYMER Design Laboratories + Think TankProcrastination is such a negative term. I prefer to think of it as getting all of your ducks in a row.Here's the real dear, you awake from hibernation in a cranky mood. Your immediate reaction to EVERYTHing is: "I'm right, the LOSERS that have been grinding their teeth all winter are WRONG!"So, because you have been asleep and avoiding the family check book, you stand at the very end of the protective barriers and say, "So What! I have been dead for the last couple of months, what is the difference in a few eternal centuries more?"Doug Williams, writer + director@Writeous Outrage and FUSE5Here's one from the director I worked with in NY during my playwriting days. She said the best way to beat block was to find famous quotes on the subjects (or themes) you're writing about, and then make them your own.The quotes serve as idea factories that 1) give you another perspective; 2) take you in a direction you'd likely have never found yourself; and 3) reinvigorate the internal creative process by making you think about something familiar in a completely different way. I've been doing that for years – in screenplays, novels, speeches, PR/marketing, online writing, et al – and it's never failed me once.David Game, academic publisher (+ nice husband)Terence Rattigan, British playwright, was advised to join the RAF [Royal Air Force] to cure writer's block.Joe Lee@ joelee.meWhen in doubt or stuck, I doodle. Doodling to me is active so it literally gets me going. It's my physical technique to kick start a mental stream of consciousness. Since my doodles are not even worthy of being called a sketch, they are uninhibited and uncensored. Also, I use scraps of paper, napkins, recycled printed sheets, anything that has no feeling of preciousness whatsoever, not even post-its or sketchbooks. (Think about how many artists who like to flaunt and show off their “sketchbooks.”) Start here, there, or anywhere – JUST DOODLE IT. As Bucky Fuller once said, “How often I found where I should be going only by setting out for somewhere else.”

March Madness: celebrating creativity + the (sometimes maddening) creative process

Get inspired

Anyone else out there been in a slump this winter? Here's a great collection of video clips from 99% to shake the cobwebs from the cranium. Check it out:10 Awesome Videos on Idea Execution + The Creative Process

Spring forward

This coming week I'll be covering creativity in my blog and would love folks to contribute thoughts, ideas, doodles, random musings or guest blog posts. Whatever you like.

Battling creative block

Last spring I posted the following three pieces to give myself a kick-start:Here Comes the Sun: Overcoming creative block (part 1 of many)Overcoming Creative Block (part 2): Writing, procrastination + keeping a sense of humorOvercoming Creative Block (part 3): Elizabeth Gilbert on nurturing creativity

Tell me:

When it's cold and gray (or when it's hard to come up with something creative to draw, design, write or say), where do you look for inspiration? How do you break out of a slump and get back in gear? If you're stuck in a long and tedious project, how do flex your creative muscles on the side? I'd love to read your comments below. Thanks!

Overcoming Creative Block (part 3): Elizabeth Gilbert on nurturing creativity

ElizabethTED Talk: Nurturing creativityI love this video clip. I watched it a year ago and just watched it again—twice in two days. As the TED intro says, it's surprisingly moving—on many levels.It covers ego, insecurity, the creative process, mental instability, fear of failure, perfectionism, the Ancient Greeks and Tom Waits.It's for writers, artists, anyone who’s anguished over, as Gilbert puts it, “the utterly maddening capriciousness of the creative process.”The author of Eat, Pray, Love turns the whole notion of creative genius on its head and ponders the use of ancient muses to create distance between the person and the product. In the end, she comes around to a common sense approach to the entire process and lauds the value of  "just showing up."In other words, lightening doesn't have to strike every time you type a sentence.“Don’t be daunted, just do your job.” That's her closing line.Good advice, indeed.

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